Tomcat i7230A S5160 
                                                                     Appendix I: Glossary 
Appendix I: Glossary 
ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface): a power management specification 
that allows the operating system to control the amount of power distributed to the computer's 
devices. Devices not in use can be turned off, reducing unnecessary power expenditure. 
AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port): a PCI based interface which was designed specifically for 
demands of 3D graphics applications. The 32 bit AGP channel directly links the graphics 
controller to the main memory. While the channel runs at only 66 MHz, it supports data 
transmission during both the rising and falling ends of the clock cycle, yielding an effective 
speed of 133 MHz. 
ATAPI (AT Attachment Packet Interface): also known as IDE or ATA; a drive 
implementation that includes the disk controller on the device itself. It allows CD ROMs and 
tape drives to be configured as master or slave devices, just like HDDs. 
ATX: the form factor designed to replace the AT form factor. It improves on the AT design by 
rotating the board 90 degrees, so that the IDE connectors are closer to the drive bays, and the 
CPU is closer to the power supply and cooling fan. The keyboard, mouse, USB, serial, and 
parallel ports are built in. 
Bandwidth: refers to carrying capacity. The greater the bandwidth, the more data the bus, 
phone line, or other electrical path, can carry. Greater bandwidth, then, also results in greater 
speed. 
BBS (BIOS Boot Specification): is a feature within the BIOS that creates, prioritizes, and 
maintains a list of all Initial Program Load (IPL) devices, and then stores that list in NVRAM. 
IPL devices have the ability to load and execute an OS, as well as provide the ability to return 
to the BIOS if the OS load process fails for some reason. At that point, the next IPL device is 
called upon to attempt loading of the OS. 
BIOS (Basic Input/Output System): the program that resides in the ROM chip, and provides 
the basic instructions for controlling your computer's hardware. Both the operating system and 
application software use BIOS routines to ensure compatibility. 
Buffer: a portion of RAM which is used to temporarily store data, usually from an application, 
though it is also used when printing, and in most keyboard drivers. The CPU can manipulate 
data in a buffer before copying it, all at once, to a disk drive. While this improves system 
performance     reading to or writing from a disk drive a single time is much faster than doing 
so repeatedly     there is also the possibility of losing your data should the system crash. 
Information stored in a buffer is temporarily stored, not permanently saved. 
Bus: a data pathway. The term is used especially to refer to the connection between the 
processor and system memory, and between the processor and PCI or ISA local buses. 
Bus mastering: allows peripheral devices and IDEs to access the system memory without 
going through the CPU (similar to DMA channels). 
Cache: a temporary storage area for data that will be needed often by an application. Using a 
cache lowers data access times, since the needed information is stored in the SRAM instead 
of in the slow DRAM. Note that the cache is also much smaller than your regular memory: a 
typical cache size is 512KB, while you may have as much as 4GB of regular memory. 
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